Anyway, at the governance meeting we agreed to keep the Windows 10 support
as Level 2 for now.
Later we can move it to Level 1 if/when we have enough test coverage there.
On Wednesday, June 3, 2020 at 11:11:33 PM UTC+2, James Nord wrote:
>
> I'm not sure it's just a technical issue.
>
> last I wa
I'm not sure it's just a technical issue.
last I was working in this area there where licensing issues around running
Windows 10 in VMs (when you run the windows Amis in Aws you also pay the
license for the software, same for GCP Azure etc). Thus we would need to have
our own licenses for all
Hi Tim,
Thanks for your feedback! One thing to mention is that we are not dropping
support for x86, at least for the time being. Latest edition of the policy
in https://github.com/jenkins-infra/jenkins.io/pull/3295 says that it is
"Level 3 - Patches considered". *Support may have limitations and e
On Friday, 10 April 2020 14:26:51 UTC+2, Oleg Nenashev wrote:
>
> Dear all,
>
> As you probably know, Jenkins core and some plugins contain native code,
> and hence they rely on operating systems and platforms. In principle
> Jenkins can run everywhere where you can run Java 8 or Java 11, but in
It's possible we could test on a Windows 10 VM on Azure/AWS. I could look
into that.
On Thu, May 28, 2020 at 12:46 PM Mark Waite
wrote:
> +1 from me. I test Windows 10 more than I test any other Windows
> version. I'm quite fine with it being Tier 1 or Tier 2. Either is fine
> with me.
>
> On
+1 from me. I test Windows 10 more than I test any other Windows version.
I'm quite fine with it being Tier 1 or Tier 2. Either is fine with me.
On Thursday, May 28, 2020 at 1:14:55 PM UTC-6, Oleg Nenashev wrote:
>
> The policy draft was approved at the last governance meeting. After it
> the
The policy draft was approved at the last governance meeting. After it
there were some changes in the plull request, mostly spelling ones. The
only notable change is moving Windows 10 amd-64 support from Tier 1 to Tier
2, because we do not actually test it in our CICD flows.
Tier 2 still means
Hi all,
I have submitted a pull request with a draft policy:
https://github.com/jenkins-infra/jenkins.io/pull/3295 .
I will appreciate any feedback from those who is running Jenkins on Windows.
Best regards,
Oleg
On Tuesday, April 14, 2020 at 3:02:04 PM UTC+2, Olblak wrote:
>
> I like Oleg prop
I like Oleg proposition very much as it clarifies the different levels of
support, and it solves Daniel concerned.
We won't run any tests on deprecated infrastructure like XP.
On Tue, Apr 14, 2020, at 12:41 PM, Oleg Nenashev wrote:
> Taking the feedback, should we introduce support levels like w
Taking the feedback, should we introduce support levels like we do with the
browser support policy?
* Level 1 - full support. We run automated testing for these platforms
- amd64 versions of latest Windows and Windows Server versions, with the
latest GA update pack (we will need to specify editi
> On 10. Apr 2020, at 14:26, Oleg Nenashev wrote:
>
> I know for sure that there are Jenkins users running on Windows XP
That's no reason to enable this insanity.
I would advocate for just going with what's generally supported by Microsoft:
Extended support would be in, "throwing bags of mo
Hi all,
Thanks for the feedback! Please find some responses below
Are you mis-matched in your pairing? Windows Server 2012 is in the Windows
> 8 family. Windows Server 2008 is the 'mate' to Windows 7, isn't it?
>
Well, I do not mind to put Windows Server 2008 into the list. My assumption
was t
>
>
> > does that mean we are testing Jenkins components (master and agent) on
> all of the supported platforms?
>
> I suppose at this point we only really test on 2019, right?
>
>
Yes, we currently only build and test on Windows Server 2019. To be fair
though, we only really test Linux stuff on Ub
On Fri, Apr 10, 2020 at 9:04 AM slide wrote:
> does that mean we are testing Jenkins components (master and agent) on all of
> the supported platforms?
I suppose at this point we only really test on 2019, right?
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Hi Oleg,
I think this sounds completely reasonable. If we are supporting these
versions, does that mean we are testing Jenkins components (master and
agent) on all of the supported platforms? How do we determine that we are
maintaining compatibility with those platforms? I assume these types of
Are you mis-matched in your pairing? Windows Server 2012 is in the Windows
8 family. Windows Server 2008 is the 'mate' to Windows 7, isn't it?
On Fri, Apr 10, 2020, 8:48 AM Tim Jacomb wrote:
> Sounds reasonable to me +1,
> I speak as someone who barely ever touches Windows and never for Jenkins
Sounds reasonable to me +1,
I speak as someone who barely ever touches Windows and never for Jenkins
though
Thanks
Tim
On Friday, 10 April 2020 13:26:51 UTC+1, Oleg Nenashev wrote:
>
> Dear all,
>
> As you probably know, Jenkins core and some plugins contain native code,
> and hence they rely o
Dear all,
As you probably know, Jenkins core and some plugins contain native code,
and hence they rely on operating systems and platforms. In principle
Jenkins can run everywhere where you can run Java 8 or Java 11, but in
practice there are some limitations. Notably we use Java Native Access and
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